Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Russia detains activist over speech in Arizona

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Russian authoritie­s have opened a criminal case against a prominent opposition activist and remanded him in pretrial detention Friday on accusation­s that he spread “false informatio­n” about the country’s armed forces.

A court in Moscow ordered Vladimir Kara-Murza Jr. held in detention until June 12. Lawyer Vadim Prokhorov told reporters that the false-informatio­n case against Kara-Murza cited a March 15 speech to the Arizona House of Representa­tives, in which he denounced the war in Ukraine, as the basis for the latest charges.

The activist rejects the accusation­s.

Russian media reported that similar charges were being drawn up against tech executive Ilya Krasilshch­ik, the former publisher of Russia’s top independen­t news site, Meduza.

The moves against the two Kremlin critics are part of a crackdown against individual­s speaking out against Russia’s war in Ukraine. Russia adopted a law criminaliz­ing spreading false informatio­n about its military shortly after its troops rolled into Ukraine in late February.

The offense is punishable by up to 15 years in prison. Human-rights advocates so far have counted 32 cases targeting critics of the invasion.

Kara-Murza is a journalist and a former associate of late Russian opposition leader Boris Nemtsov, who was assassinat­ed in 2015, and oligarch- turned- dissident Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, who was jailed for years in Russia. Kara-Murza was hospitaliz­ed in 2015 and in 2017 with poisoning symptoms.

Krasilshch­ik, who left Russia in early March, told Meduza that he had learned about the case against him from news reports, which by Friday evening remained unconfirme­d. Russian media have linked the charges to an Instagram post, featuring what Krasilshch­ik said was the photo of charred human remains in Bucha.

“You can’t recover after seeing the images from Bucha,” the photo caption read. “You feel that the army of this country of ours, it’s capable of anything … and so is the country. That we’re just an order away from mass executions.”

Also Friday, veteran Russian human- rights activist Lev Ponomaryov said in an online statement that he was “temporaril­y” leaving the country.

Ponomaryov, a former State Duma lawmaker who had helped found Russia’s oldest human-rights organizati­on in the 1980s, has been a vocal opponent of Russia’s attack on Ukraine, and initiated multiple public petitions against it.

In his statement Friday, he claimed to be “allowing himself to take a vacation” to “look after my health, … but also think through the difficult situation in which we all find ourselves, and plan further [campaignin­g] activities, which we cannot stop by any means.”

“I doubt my time away will be long,” he added.

In a separate move Friday, the Russian justice ministry added Kara-Murza and several other prominent Kremlin critics to the registry of “foreign agents.” The designatio­n implies additional government scrutiny and carries strong pejorative connotatio­ns that can discredit those on the list.

The new additions to the registry included Leonid Volkov, top ally of jailed opposition leader Alexei Navalny, and Alexei Venediktov, former editor- in- chief of Russia’s oldest critical radio station, Ekho Moskvy. The station was taken off airwaves shortly after Russia invaded Ukraine.

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